n
the early 1830s, the spirit of the age tended towards social and political reform.
Believing utterly in the necessity for the application of Jeremy
Bentham's aphorism "The greatest good for the greatest number," Edward Bulwer
sought election to the House of Commons in May, 1831, as a Whig
Radical, serving initially as the member for St. Ives in Huntingdonshire. After
the passage of the Great
Reform Bill in 1832 (in which, ironically, his rural seat was swept away),
he was returned as the M. P. for Lincoln. As a Whig, he spent a total of eleven
years in government, making his maiden speech in the Commons on the second night
of the debate for Lord John Russell's epoch-making legislation in 1832. To forestall
a Tory return to government, Bulwer attempted to expose Sir
Robert Peel's stated interest in reform as mere pretense by publishing the
pamphlet Letter to a Late Minister on the Present Crisis (21 November,
1834). When his political ally, Lord Durham, accepted the post of British ambassador
to St. Petersburg, Bulwer resigned his seat and remained out of government for
eleven years.

In the general election of 1852, Bulwer stood for the Conservatives, the shift
in his political allegiance accounted for by his inheriting Knebworth after
his mother's death in 1843 (under the terms of her will, he hyphenated his name
to the patrician-sounding "Bulwer-Lytton" ), his fear of social unrest on the
continent after the year of revolutions (1848), and his friendship with the
brilliant Benjamin Disraeli.
As a rural landowner, he was particularly distressed about the Whigs' repeal
of the Corn Laws, the
laissez-faire doctrines of the Cobdenite faction, and the growing influence
of the factory-owners. As member for Herfordshire, he supported his government
in the Crimean War and
opposed abolition of the East India Company in 1857. Of significance to his
fellow writers was his bill to abolish stamp duties on newspapers, which he
regarded as a tax on knowledge. Upon the fall of Lord Palmerston's administration
in 1858, Bulwer accepted a cabinet post under Lord
Derby as Colonial Secretary. When gold was discovered on the Fraser River
in 1858, Bulwer drafted a bill to secure the crown's rights to the territory
and created the colony of "New Caledonia," aptly named by Bulwer for its many
mountain chains. His bill provided for representative government at the end
of a five-year period. Although only Colonial Secretary for little over a year,
he also separated Queensland from New South Wales administratively, introduced
legislation regarding estates in the West Indies, settled the French dispute
over the exchange of Portendio for Albuda, and sent Gladstone
to the eastern Mediterranean to deal with the issue of whether the Ionian Islands
should remain a British protectorate or become part of Greece.

The termination of this second, highly productive political career was occasioned by his ex-wife's harassing him and his friends with obscene letters as part of a blackmail scheme to draw from him a larger allowance. In the 1858 elections, she vilified her husband in public as he was addressing his constituents from the platform. The result was a physical breakdown and his resignation from cabinet in December, 1858. To support Lord Derby he agreed to remain at his post until a suitable replacement could be found. Although no longer in the front benches, he retained his seat in the Commons until 1866, when he was elevated to the House of Lords as Baron Lytton of Knebworth.